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jaimerai

Jaimerai is the unspaced form sometimes seen in written text as a variant of j'aimerai, the French verb phrase for the first person singular future tense of aimer. It translates to "I will love" and, in some contexts, can be understood as "I will like," depending on nuance and usage in French.

Grammar and usage: The correct orthography in standard French is j'aimerai with an apostrophe. It is formed

Context and frequency: The future tense j'aimerai appears in formal writing and literary contexts more readily

Relationship to related forms: Aimer also forms other tenses and moods, including j’aimerais (conditional present: I

See also: French verbs, aimer, future tense, conditional mood.

from
the
subject
pronoun
je,
the
verb
aimer,
and
the
future
tense
ending
-ai.
The
future
j'aimerai
expresses
a
simple
future
action:
I
will
love.
It
is
distinct
from
the
conditional
j'aimerais,
which
means
"I
would
like"
or
"I
would
love."
The
choice
between
future
and
conditional
changes
meaning
and
tone,
with
the
latter
often
used
for
politeness
or
hypotheticals.
than
in
everyday
speech,
where
speakers
frequently
use
periphrastic
constructions
such
as
aller
+
infinitive
(je
vais
aimer)
or
the
conditional
(j'aimerais)
to
convey
related
meanings.
The
unspaced
form
jaimerai
is
not
standard,
but
may
appear
in
informal
communication,
social
media,
or
as
a
username
or
search
query
where
apostrophes
are
omitted.
would
like/I
would
love)
and
j’aimerai
(future).
Understanding
the
distinction
between
these
forms
helps
clarify
intent
and
degree
of
certainty
in
French.